Feature/Financial Stability
Improving China's OTC business is a vital for the creation of a multi-layered capital market
Zhu Congjiu, vice-governor of Zhejiang province and former assistant to the chairman of the China Securities Regulatory Commission, explains how the country can effect a multi-layered capital market
Developing China's capital market is central to 'new normal' reform
China is adopting an approval-based rather than disclosure-based IPO system as well as developing an OTC equity market as part of its effort to deepen the role of financial markets
China’s path to financial deepening
Despite China’s quick progress in the sphere of manufactured goods, the country’s financial system has been a few steps behind, but that is steadily changing
Devising effective data strategies to help inform policy decisions
The publication of the Irving Fisher Committee’s report on good data practices offers the potential for powerful data sharing, but more work needs to be done at the tactical and practical levels
Central banks face weight of expectations in sub-Saharan Africa
The art of central banking has changed dramatically in frontier markets. Monetary policy, financial regulation, capital flows and exchange rate are now centre stage, writes Louis Kasekende
Assessing the value of financial stability reports
More than 90 central banks now produce financial stability reports. Emrah Uslu and Eyup Kahveci look at the various approaches they take as well as appraising their usefulness.
Reviving the faltering euro economy
There are three options to address Europe’s core problem: real differences in production costs. None of them involve asset purchases by the European Central Bank, writes Allan Meltzer
Economics in Central Banking: Claudio Borio
The Bank for International Settlements’ economics head secures win for his work applying the concept of ‘excess financial elasticity’ to the international monetary and financial system
The challenges for central banks
Demands are being made for central banks to consider financial stability alongside price stability, as a key component of their monetary policy. But that is nothing new for central banks
Can central bankers live up to their role as the guardians of finance?
Central bankers need to be the risk managers of the financial system to help mitigate the fallout from future crises. Those that engaged in the latest bouts of QE have not made a good start
Payments achitecture fit for the 21st century
Globalisation, changes in FMIs and the emergence of new payment schemes will require ever closer co-operation to ensure the safety and efficiency of the underpinnings of the financial markets
The evolving role of the Eurosystem and its national central banks
Anne Le Lorier pinpoints the challenges Eurosystem central banks will have to address in the aftermath of the global financial crisis.
(Too) great expectations for macro-prudential?
Macro-prudential policies are a welcome response to the financial crisis, but not necessarily in their current incarnation. BIS economics head Claudio Borio highlights their limitations
Two future paths for central banking
Andrew Haldane identifies two future worlds for central banks along with their implications for monetary policy, macro-prudential regulation, operations and transparency.
The international monetary ‘anti-system’
A network of systemic risk boards might improve stability in the absence of a viable international financial system, writes Jacques de Larosière.
ECB's Mario Draghi faces ongoing German ‘angst’
ECB president to face further German resistance on interest rates, banking union and OMTs – with Germany’s constitutional court ruling likely more problematic than some observers believe.
Central bank support for CCPs and TRs
The wider use of central counterparties and trade repositories may pose challenges for central banks. Carlos León, Clara Machado and Ricardo Mariño explain the tactics central banks are adopting.
Payments and clearing technology provider of the year: VocaLink
VocaLink has excelled by building the infrastructure for a new accounts switching service in the UK and exporting its pioneering Faster Payments platform overseas
Europe could learn from Germany’s macro-prudential approach
Germany’s approach to macro-prudential oversight could offer insights into how to democratise ‘hard’ policy tools and enshrine independence at a time when more power is being transferred to the ECB
The PBoC, the liquidity squeeze and market liberalisation
The PBoC was accused of poor communication and inaction when interbank rates spiked in June. But Hui Feng believes the central bank wanted to give regulated financial institutions a warning
A status report on Dodd-Frank and the Volcker rule
As the US and Europe move closer to co-operating on derivatives legislation, Vembar Ranganathan looks at the status of Dodd-Frank implementation aimed at curbing excesses in the derivatives market
HKMA primed for mobile payments surge
The Hong Kong Monetary Authority is enhancing the legal and supervisory framework needed for the safe development of retail payments for its echnology-savvy population
New central bank policy mandates could cause vicious feedback loops
The trend for central banks to take on mandates for prudential policy in addition to monetary policy could cause dangerous feedback loops in the absence of a well-defined risk appetite